t's not so much that Utah law needs to better protect dogs and cats and horsed and tur- keys. It's more that it needs to better protect people from liv- ing in the kind of society where cruelty to dogs and cats and horses and turkeys may be too easily winked at. Animal Cruelty now is branded here as a far more serious offense than, say, littering. It is a class A misdemeanor, with a penalty of up to a year in jail. And that isn't exactly a bed of roses for anyone who might be prosecuted under the existing statute. But the simple fact that it isn't a felony is thought by prosecu- tors and other concerned people to send the wrong message to those who might think it's no big deal to torture some poor dumb animal to death just because you can. It could also be read as tell- ing the criminal justice system that Utahns are not concerned about the problem. But we are. House Bill 242 would remedy that legal shortcoming and make it a low-level felony to torture an animal. And it would make it a higher-level crime to do so in the presence of a child. Perhaps more important, this bill would toughen the provisions to steer those convicted of animal abuse toward a psychological evaluation and, when warranted, treatment. That is important because, like laws against child abuse and laws against drug abuse, a law |
against animal abuse does little good to anyone if all it does is whack the offender up side of the head and walk away. The point has to be to whack the offender up side of the head and then, hav- ing gotten his attention, get him help. While some people are of- fended to their core by the very thought of harming innocent ani- mals, others find it hard to get worked up about. But even those too far removed from the animal kingdom to care should under- stand that animal abuse is not jsut harmful to the animal. Abusing or killing animals, and suffering no rebuke, can all too easily lead those who aren't innately repulsed to do it again. they may move from wild ani- mals to pets, from their animals to yours and then, in many docu- mented cased, on to people. It is also important to note that this bill, whose sponsors include a former Cache County prosecu- tor, Rep. Scott Wyatt, R-Logan, is not some kind of far-out animal rights legislation. It would specif- ically exempt, as does the exist- ing law, raising animals for meat, rodeos, scientific research, ac- cepted animal training methods or humanely putting down ani- mals that are too injured or sick to recover. This bill recognizes that civi- lized life is not a contest between people and animals. Setting down clear expectations against animal cruelty is in the best interest of all creatures, great and small. |